She was 24 years old, smiling through a hole punched in a newspaper. For decades, no one knew who she was.
The picture is simple but electric: a young woman’s face exploding through the front page of the Corriere della Sera, her expression caught between joy and quiet determination. Behind her, the headline reads “Italy is Reborn.” It is 1946. The country has just voted to abolish its monarchy and become a republic. And this woman, whoever she is, is the future in the flesh.
That image lived for more than 70 years as one of the most reproduced photos in Italian history: on textbooks, posters, anniversary commemorations without a name attached. It took until 2016 for the journalists to finally put a name to the face: Anna Iberti.
A country reborn, a woman erased
June 2, 1946 was not only the day Italy became a republic. It was also the first time women could vote in a national election in Italy. As the Journal of International Women’s Studies notes, women's right to suffrage in Italy became law in Italy on February 1, 1945, thanks in large part to women who had been involved in the antifascist resistance. The 1946 referendum was their first national vote, and over 10 million women voted.
One of them was Anna Iberti. She was a native of Milan, of a humble family with socialist leanings. At the time the photo was taken, she was a trained teacher, but she was working in the administration of the socialist newspaper Avanti! She was not a model. She wasn't a politician. She was just a young woman who happened to be in the orbit of Federico Patellani, one of the pioneering photojournalists of Italy.
Patellani had just returned from covering World War II and was shooting for Tempo magazine, Italy's equivalent to Life. That day he took 41 pictures of Iberti on the roof of the Avanti! Most got thrown away. One became eternal.